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portal vein The main vein carrying blood into the liver from the intestine.
Ãâó: www.ferring.com/therapeutic/gastro/GLOSSARY.htm
PORT (1) A system or network access point for data entry or exit. (2) A connector on a device to which cables for other devices such as display stations and printers are attached. (3) The representation of a physical connection to the link hardware. A port is sometimes referred to as an adapter; however, there can be more than one port on an adapter. One or more ports are controlled by a single data link control (DLC) process. ...
Ãâó: www.sabc.co.za/manual/ibm/9agloss.htm
PORT A method used by TCP to specify which program running on a computer should process a message arriving over the Internet.
Ãâó: www.cs.cornell.edu/wya/DigLib/MS1999/glossary.html
PORT The "abstraction that transport protocols use to distinguish among multiple destinations within a given host computer. TCP/IP protocols identify ports using small positive integers." [3] The transport selectors (TSEL) used by the OSI transport layer are equivalent to ports. RTP depends upon the lower-layer protocol to provide some mechanism such as ports to multiplex the RTP and RTCP packets of a session.
Ãâó: www.freesoft.org/CIE/RFC/1889/6.htm
PORT Verb: To translate a program written for one computer so that it can be
Ãâó: www.digitalhymnal.org/glossary_m-z.html
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